
Esther Peterson, President Lyndon Johnson’s special assistant for consumer affairs, was dispatched to Denver, where she hugged West and expressed support for the cause.

In fact, the movement had not gone unnoticed at the White House. READ NEXT: 29 Ways to Save Hundreds on Groceries “A lot of these women don’t care about facts,” another complained, “they just want the price of bacon to come down.”Īn industry executive in Detroit said the women should go picket the White House instead. “The logic of our balance sheet does not interest them.”

“The housewives are emotional,” one grocery exec groused. Others, almost always quoted anonymously, couldn’t conceal their condescension: Some retailers appeared sympathetic to the women’s complaints, often insisting they had less control over prices than people thought and were simply passing along increases from lower in the food chain. In Carlsbad, N.M., women picketing one supermarket found themselves being picketed by union members who’d been laid off as a result of their boycott. In Lexington, Ky., boycotters singled out stores that offered trading stamps and other promotional gimmicks, which they said needlessly added to grocery costs. The We’ve Had It Club in suburban Atlanta formed a motorcade, taking its protests from store to store. In Buffalo, a group calling itself Women on the Warpath began a boycott of eggs.

In Dallas, women organized what they called a “ladycott” of local supermarkets. “Mad Housewives Spread Boycott” read the headline in the Lowell, Mass., Sun. Meanwhile the movement had expanded to other cities across the U.S. A quart of mayonnaise had dropped from 59 cents to 53, a 32-ounce package of pancake mix from 57 cents to 52.Īsked by Life if she was concerned that prices would shoot back up once the pressure was off, West replied that, “We’ve got scouts and the minute that happens, look out!” It reported that a 28-ounce can of baked beans, formerly 49 cents, was now selling for 45. The Associated Press found a more modest, but still substantial decline, especially given that prices had been headed nowhere but up before the protests.

By the time the protests were through, stores had dropped their prices by as much as 20%. Soon West had organized boycotts of five Denver-area supermarket chains, totaling some 150 stores. When the “feisty, 52-year-old Denver grandmother” asked a store official for an explanation, Life magazine reported, she was told to “stick to your cooking and let us decide prices.” Paul West (as newspapers commonly identified women in that era) noticed the price for a jar of olives had gone up four times within a single month. The first rumblings of revolt were heard in Phoenix, where homemakers angered by bread prices decided to boycott commercial bakeries and start baking their own.īut it was in Denver that the conflict would escalate into all-out war. The target of their ire? High supermarket prices. But a nearly forgotten cause also made headlines 50 years ago this month, the so-called "housewives’ revolt" of 1966.Īn unlikely pairing of words if there ever was one, the housewives’ revolt brought hundreds of placard-toting women into the streets, while many thousands more participated in other ways. The ‘60s may be remembered as a decade of protest-the Civil Rights movement, the backlash against the war in Vietnam, the Stonewall rebellion, to name just three.
